What Is Comprehensible Input and Why Does It Matter for Language Learning? Published onNovember 4, 2020 ritten by Ramsay Lewis
Stephen Krashen’s input hypothesis is one of the most influential theories of second language acquisition. He argues that Comprehensible Input is the most important factor in learning another language. Here’s why it matters.
Table of contentsWhat is the Input Hypothesis?What does all that mean?What is comprehensible input? What evidence is there for the input hypothesis?Evidence in native language learningEvidence in second language learningTheClockwork OrangestudyComprehensible input matters“Compelling” input is bestWhat about output?What does it all mean? What does this mean for you—the English learner?The beginner levelThe intermediate levelThe advanced levelThe take-away: focus on comprehensible input in English that you enjoyReferences
There’s a scene in the movie Love Actually where Jamie, played by Colin Firth, is learning Portuguese. He’s sitting in a classroom with row after row of other language students listening to headphones and repeating simple Portuguese phrases, over and over again.
You might recognise the language learning trend that this scene was referencing. It is called the “Audiolingual Method” and became popular throughout the 1940s through the 1960s, declining after that. The idea was that if you heard something enough, and you repeated it, you could memorise it and eventually learn the language.
That is just one of probably hundreds of language learning theories that have picked up steam at some point in the last century and then faded away.
There are many others. When looking at the wide variety of approaches to learning languages, you might be tempted to ask, “Do we actually know anything about how people learn languages?” Especially when so many websites and services claim that their method is “based on science!”